Anonymous wrote:PP here. Someone made the comment that there is a league of Bolivians so we should get excited. My point is that in terms of "street cred," Bolivia is not a draw for the casual of serious soccer enthusiast. Again, look at the facts. Any country can produce one or two folks over its history but you will not find anyone in Latin America or elsewhere with a Tahuichi jersey let alone anyone who knows who he is. But you will find people who know Messi, Maradona, Palermo, Tevez, Neynar, Willian, Ronaldinho, Suarez, etc. Please folks, stop the nonsense. There is no smugness or generalizing. Bolivia is not a soccer powerhouse and never has been. The point here is that if you say that there is a Brazilian, Argentine, German, Italian league, people will flock to it. If you say there is a Bolvians league, they will likely yawn. Yes, Bolivia plays soccer as does a majority of countries in Latin America but if you go off its trackrecord of ranked players and placing it national team and professional teams in international tournaments, it is clearly a 3rd tier country behind every team in South America except Venezuela.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. Someone made the comment that there is a league of Bolivians so we should get excited. My point is that in terms of "street cred," Bolivia is not a draw for the casual of serious soccer enthusiast. Again, look at the facts. Any country can produce one or two folks over its history but you will not find anyone in Latin America or elsewhere with a Tahuichi jersey let alone anyone who knows who he is. But you will find people who know Messi, Maradona, Palermo, Tevez, Neynar, Willian, Ronaldinho, Suarez, etc. Please folks, stop the nonsense. There is no smugness or generalizing. Bolivia is not a soccer powerhouse and never has been. The point here is that if you say that there is a Brazilian, Argentine, German, Italian league, people will flock to it. If you say there is a Bolvians league, they will likely yawn. Yes, Bolivia plays soccer as does a majority of countries in Latin America but if you go off its trackrecord of ranked players and placing it national team and professional teams in international tournaments, it is clearly a 3rd tier country behind every team in South America except Venezuela.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. Someone made the comment that there is a league of Bolivians so we should get excited. My point is that in terms of "street cred," Bolivia is not a draw for the casual of serious soccer enthusiast. Again, look at the facts. Any country can produce one or two folks over its history but you will not find anyone in Latin America or elsewhere with a Tahuichi jersey let alone anyone who knows who he is. But you will find people who know Messi, Maradona, Palermo, Tevez, Neynar, Willian, Ronaldinho, Suarez, etc. Please folks, stop the nonsense. There is no smugness or generalizing. Bolivia is not a soccer powerhouse and never has been. The point here is that if you say that there is a Brazilian, Argentine, German, Italian league, people will flock to it. If you say there is a Bolvians league, they will likely yawn. Yes, Bolivia plays soccer as does a majority of countries in Latin America but if you go off its trackrecord of ranked players and placing it national team and professional teams in international tournaments, it is clearly a 3rd tier country behind every team in South America except Venezuela.
RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:You folks will have to show me who besides DC United fans considers Bolivia a serious soccer nation compared to Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay. Bolvia has qualified for World Cup once in 50 years and has not sent team to the Copa Libertador nor Copa America. Sorry folks but you would get more interest in a league of Brazilian or Argentine expats than one of Bolivians. I don't even know why we are having this discussion. You know the truth.
Google "tahuichi" and tell me if the only people writing about it are "DC United fans."
So ... back to travel soccer now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dumb discussion. This area is a melting pot. There are good players of all backgrounds. Who cares what the history of another country is. There are many passionate soccer loving countries around the world that have produced individual talents and are failures as a country. Hopefully that passion and love has been passed down to players in our area from those countries. Let's focus on the players in front of us with the hope of having a great talent emerge.
What is dumb is anyone thinking Bolivia is a top producer of soccer talent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dumb discussion. This area is a melting pot. There are good players of all backgrounds. Who cares what the history of another country is. There are many passionate soccer loving countries around the world that have produced individual talents and are failures as a country. Hopefully that passion and love has been passed down to players in our area from those countries. Let's focus on the players in front of us with the hope of having a great talent emerge.
What is dumb is anyone thinking Bolivia is a top producer of soccer talent?
Anonymous wrote:Dumb discussion. This area is a melting pot. There are good players of all backgrounds. Who cares what the history of another country is. There are many passionate soccer loving countries around the world that have produced individual talents and are failures as a country. Hopefully that passion and love has been passed down to players in our area from those countries. Let's focus on the players in front of us with the hope of having a great talent emerge.